Budolph f



(No Model.)

B; F..BARTEL.

GLOVE.

I No. 302,085. Patented July 15,- 1884.

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UNITED STATES PATENT O FICE.

RUDOLPH F. BARTEL, OF JERSEY CITY, NEWJERSEY.

GLOVE.

' SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 302,085, dated July 15, 1884.

- Application filed December 12, 1883. (No model.)

To all whom it may cmoccrn Be it known that I, RUDOLPH F. BARTEL, a citizen of the United States, residing at Jersey City, in the county of Hudson and State of New Jersey, have invented new and useful Improvements in Gloves, of which the following is a specification.

This invention relates to improvements in that class of gloves in which the body, the thumb, and the fingers are formed out of one and the same piece of material, the pattern being formed in such a manner that when it is folded it forms the thumb complete, and also the inner sides and the outer sides of all I 5 the fingers, and in the body of the glove only a single seam is requir'ed,which runs from the tip of the first fingerto the button-opening or hand-opening. Thepeculiarand novel formationof my glove is pointed out in the following specification and illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which I Figure 1 represents an inside view of the pattern when spread out fiat. Fig. 2 is an'in- I side view of the glove when finished. I Similarletters indicate corresponding parts. In the drawings-the letter A designates the pattern for my glove. The linesa b, c d, and

e f are-the fold-lines. The piece B,when folded upon itself in the line a b,forms the thumb. The piece 0, when folded upon itself in the line 0 d,forms the inside and the outside of the' first finger. The piece D,when folded upon itself in theline c f, forms theinside and outside of the little finger. The piece E forms theinside and the piece F the outside of the middle finger, and the piece G forms the inside and the pieceH the outside of the fourth finger. The thumb-edge of the pattern is provided with a convex protuberance, g, and the finger-edge 0 is provided with a concavity, h, and with a gore, c. When the pattern is folded in the lines a b and c f, the concavity h of the fingeredge lies against the convex protuberance g of i i the thumb-edge, and the gorei extends up between the edgej of the thumb-pieceB on one side and the edges k Z of the thumb-piece B and of the first fingerpiece,G,respectively,on the opposite side, as shown in Fig. 2. When the glove is finished,there is but a single seam, m, in the body of the glove,.and'tl1is seam extends from the hand-opening to the tip of the first finger; In order to complete the fingers, a piece, a, is inserted between the first and second fingers, a piece, 0, between thesecond and third fingers, and a piece, p, between the 5 third and the little finger, as usually practiced in the manufacture of gloves.

By means of the gore t the junction between the inside of the thumb and the body of the glove is strengthened, and the danger that the glove will tear at that place is materially reduced. 1

In cutting the pattern for my glove from skins it maybe desirable, for economys sake, to out the core 45 from a separate piece, and to 6 secure the same to the finger-edge 'of the pattern by stitching or otherwise.

What I claim as new, and desire to secure by Lette'rsPatent, is-

A glove-pattern cut integral in oneand the same piece of material, and comprising the thumb-piece B, the finger-pieces G D E F G H, the convex protuberance g on the thumbedge, and'the concavity hand gore t on its finger-edge,-the thumb-piece being cut close to the first finger-piece to create the adjacent parallel edges k and Z along the first fingerpiece and thumb-piece, substantially as shown and described.

Intestimony whereof Ihave hereunto set my hand and seal in the presenceof two subscribing witnesses. 1

RUDOLPIT F. BARTEL. [L. s] Witnesses: 4

' W. HAUFF,

E. F. KASTENHUBER. 

